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Author Rice, Jenny.

Title Distant publics : development rhetoric and the subject of crisis / Jenny Rice.

Publication Info. Pittsburgh, Pa. : University of Pittsburgh Press, [2012]
©2012

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Moore Stacks  P301.5.P67 R53 2012    Available  ---
Description x, 230 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
Series Pittsburgh series in composition, literacy, and culture
Pittsburgh series in composition, literacy, and culture.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents Introduction: Rhetorical vistas -- Rhetoric's development crisis -- The public subject of feeling (with exceptions) -- Vultures and kooks : the rhetoric of injury claims -- Lost places and memory claims -- The good and the bad : gentrification and equivalence claims -- Inquiry as social action -- Epilogue: Working in the epi-logos.
Summary "Urban sprawl is omnipresent in America and has left many citizens questioning their ability to stop it. In Distant Publics, Jenny Rice examines patterns of public discourse that have evolved in response to development in urban and suburban environments. Centering her study on Austin, Texas, Rice finds a city that has simultaneously celebrated and despised development. Rice outlines three distinct ways that the rhetoric of publics counteracts development: through injury claims, memory claims, and equivalence claims. In injury claims, rhetors frame themselves as victims in a dispute. Memory claims allow rhetors to anchor themselves to an older, deliberative space, rather than to a newly evolving one. Equivalence claims see the benefits on both sides of an issue, and here rhetors effectively become nonactors. Rice provides case studies of development disputes that place the reader in the middle of real-life controversies and evidence her theories of claims-based public rhetorics. She finds that these methods comprise the most common (though not exclusive) vernacular surrounding development and shows how each is often counterproductive to its own goals. Rice further demonstrates that these claims create a particular role or public subjectivity grounded in one's own feelings, which serves to distance publics from each other and the issues at hand. Rice argues that rhetoricians have a duty to transform current patterns of public development discourse so that all individuals may engage in matters of crisis. She articulates its sustainability as both a goal and future disciplinary challenge of rhetorical studies and offers tools and methodologies toward that end"--Publisher description.
Provenance Gift of Paul and Mary Haas.
Subject Rhetoric -- Political aspects -- United States.
Rhetoric -- Political aspects.
United States.
Rhetoric -- Social aspects -- United States.
Rhetoric -- Social aspects.
Rhetoric.
Persuasion (Rhetoric) -- Political aspects -- United States.
Persuasion (Rhetoric) -- Political aspects.
Persuasion (Rhetoric)
Persuasion (Rhetoric) -- Social aspects -- United States.
Social aspects.
Discourse analysis -- Political aspects -- United States.
Discourse analysis -- Political aspects.
Discourse analysis.
Discourse analysis -- Social aspects -- United States.
Discourse analysis -- Social aspects.
Community development -- United States.
Community development.
ISBN 9780822962045 paperback alkaline paper
0822962047 paperback alkaline paper
Standard No. 40021272404